MemoryExtensions.Split Method

Definition

Overloads

Split(ReadOnlySpan<Char>, Span<Range>, Char, StringSplitOptions)

Parses the source ReadOnlySpan<T> for the specified separator, populating the destination span with Range instances representing the regions between the separators.

Split(ReadOnlySpan<Char>, Span<Range>, ReadOnlySpan<Char>, StringSplitOptions)

Parses the source ReadOnlySpan<T> for the specified separator, populating the destination span with Range instances representing the regions between the separators.

Split(ReadOnlySpan<Char>, Span<Range>, Char, StringSplitOptions)

Source:
MemoryExtensions.cs
Source:
MemoryExtensions.cs

Parses the source ReadOnlySpan<T> for the specified separator, populating the destination span with Range instances representing the regions between the separators.

public static int Split (this ReadOnlySpan<char> source, Span<Range> destination, char separator, StringSplitOptions options = System.StringSplitOptions.None);
static member Split : ReadOnlySpan<char> * Span<Range> * char * StringSplitOptions -> int
<Extension()>
Public Function Split (source As ReadOnlySpan(Of Char), destination As Span(Of Range), separator As Char, Optional options As StringSplitOptions = System.StringSplitOptions.None) As Integer

Parameters

source
ReadOnlySpan<Char>

The source span to parse.

destination
Span<Range>

The destination span into which the resulting ranges are written.

separator
Char

A character that delimits the regions in this instance.

options
StringSplitOptions

A bitwise combination of the enumeration values that specifies whether to trim whitespace and include empty ranges.

Returns

The number of ranges written into destination.

Remarks

Delimiter characters are not included in the elements of the returned array.

If the destination span is empty, or if the options specifies RemoveEmptyEntries and source is empty, or if options specifies both RemoveEmptyEntries and TrimEntries and the source is entirely whitespace, no ranges are written to the destination.

If the span does not contain separator, or if destination's length is 1, a single range will be output containing the entire source, subject to the processing implied by options.

If there are more regions in source than will fit in destination, the first destination length minus 1 ranges are stored in destination, and a range for the remainder of source is stored in destination.

Applies to

Split(ReadOnlySpan<Char>, Span<Range>, ReadOnlySpan<Char>, StringSplitOptions)

Source:
MemoryExtensions.cs
Source:
MemoryExtensions.cs

Parses the source ReadOnlySpan<T> for the specified separator, populating the destination span with Range instances representing the regions between the separators.

public static int Split (this ReadOnlySpan<char> source, Span<Range> destination, ReadOnlySpan<char> separator, StringSplitOptions options = System.StringSplitOptions.None);
static member Split : ReadOnlySpan<char> * Span<Range> * ReadOnlySpan<char> * StringSplitOptions -> int
<Extension()>
Public Function Split (source As ReadOnlySpan(Of Char), destination As Span(Of Range), separator As ReadOnlySpan(Of Char), Optional options As StringSplitOptions = System.StringSplitOptions.None) As Integer

Parameters

source
ReadOnlySpan<Char>

The source span to parse.

destination
Span<Range>

The destination span into which the resulting ranges are written.

separator
ReadOnlySpan<Char>

A character that delimits the regions in this instance.

options
StringSplitOptions

A bitwise combination of the enumeration values that specifies whether to trim whitespace and include empty ranges.

Returns

The number of ranges written into destination.

Remarks

Delimiter characters are not included in the elements of the returned array.

If the destination span is empty, or if the options specifies RemoveEmptyEntries and source is empty, or if options specifies both RemoveEmptyEntries and TrimEntries and the source is entirely whitespace, no ranges are written to the destination.

If the span does not contain separator, or if destination's length is 1, a single range will be output containing the entire source, subject to the processing implied by options.

If there are more regions in source than will fit in destination, the first destination length minus 1 ranges are stored in destination, and a range for the remainder of source is stored in destination.

Applies to